Dichloroacetate prevents restenosis in preclinical animal models of vessel injury

Tobias Deuse, Xiaoqin Hua, Dong Wang, Lars Maegdefessel, Joerg Heeren, Ludger Scheja, Juan P. Bolaños, Aleksandar Rakovic, Joshua M. Spin, Mandy Stubbendorff, Fumiaki Ikeno, Florian Länger, Tanja Zeller, Leonie Schulte-Uentrop, Andrea Stoehr, Ryo Itagaki, Francois Haddad, Thomas Eschenhagen, Stefan Blankenberg, Rainer KiefmannHermann Reichenspurner, Joachim Velden, Christine Klein, Alan Yeung, Robert C. Robbins, Philip S. Tsao, Sonja Schrepfer*

*Corresponding author for this work
35 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Despite the introduction of antiproliferative drug-eluting stents, coronary heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States. In-stent restenosis and bypass graft failure are characterized by excessive smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation and concomitant myointima formation with luminal obliteration. Here we show that during the development of myointimal hyperplasia in human arteries, SMCs show hyperpolarization of their mitochondrial membrane potential (Δ Ψ m) and acquire a temporary state with a high proliferative rate and resistance to apoptosis. Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase isoform 2 (PDK2) was identified as a key regulatory protein, and its activation proved necessary for relevant myointima formation. Pharmacologic PDK2 blockade with dichloroacetate or lentiviral PDK2 knockdown prevented Δ Ψ m hyperpolarization, facilitated apoptosis and reduced myointima formation in injured human mammary and coronary arteries, rat aortas, rabbit iliac arteries and swine (pig) coronary arteries. In contrast to several commonly used antiproliferative drugs, dichloroacetate did not prevent vessel re-endothelialization. Targeting myointimal Δ Ψ m and alleviating apoptosis resistance is a novel strategy for the prevention of proliferative vascular diseases.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNature
Volume509
Issue number7502
Pages (from-to)641-644
Number of pages4
ISSN0028-0836
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.01.2014

Funding

Acknowledgements We thank C. Pahrmann for performing all cell cultures and for her technical assistance. We thank J. Thoms for performing immunoblots, H. Wiebold for assistance in organ chamber experiments, J. Lyons and her team for her assistance with the swine study, and S. Ehret, A. Deng and M. Resch for their technical assistance. We thank the UKE Imaging Facility (UMIF, B. Zobiak) and the UKE Animal Facility. Ethicon (Norderstedt, Germany) provided surgical suture materials. We also thank A. Treszl and G. Schoen for their statistical analyses. This study was funded by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), SCHR992/ 3-1 and SCHR992/4-1 to S.S.), the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT, to S.S.), the Förderverein des Universitären Herzzentrums Hamburg (to S.S.), the Hermann and Lilly Schilling Foundation (to C.K.), the MINECO (SAF2013-41177-R, to J.P.B.) and the NIH (NIH 1R01HL105299, to P.S.T.).

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